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Iceland is a country that is on many photographers wishlists, including mine. In February, we landed at Keflavik airport to a gentle snowfall, ready for ten days of photography, based on the Southern half of the ring road.

Reykjavik

That night, Reykjavik was treated to it biggest snowfall in 80 years – 50 cm (20 inches) laid down overnight.

50 cm of overnight snow

As our itinerary had us in Reykjavik for two nights, this wasn’t an issue. The council had brought in multiple snowploughs from out of town and were working tirelessly to get the city cleared.

Reykjavik is not a big city, although it is the most Northerly capital city in the world. Being so compact, it was trivial to walk from place to place (icy footways notwithstanding), and what a place it is! Great architecture and sculptures scattered all over the city.

Highlights for us were the Harpa concert hall and the Hallgrímskirkja church.

Vik

Moving out of the city, we headed for the coastal town of Vik. This is most well known for its black sand beach, and the Reynisfjara sea stacks. A short distance away is Dyrhólaey, with its quaint lighthouse and stunning views.

In Vik, we were treated to a good display of the Northern lights. A period of high solar activity was occurring, and when there was no cloud, the lights looked good.

Aurora over Vik

Hofn

Moving on to Hofn, we first paid a visit to Jökulsárlón, the glacier lagoon, with its nearby iceberg beach. Crystal clear lumps of ice set on the black sand, sculpted into various shapes by the elements, it is an ideal place to play with techniques such as long exposures.

In Hofn itself, we spent some time at the Stokksnes peninsular, cold, windswept, and bleak, the standout subject is the imposing Vestrahorn mountain. Once again, we were treated to a good display of the Northern Lights. The howling wind made photography very tricky, as the tripod was shaking. I had to time the photos in between gusts of wind.

Golden circle

We came back via “The Golden Circle”, a popular tourist route taking some of the most iconic attractions, including the Gulfloss waterfall, Thingvellir national park, and the Geyser (which was so crowded we didn’t stop for a photo).

The good

The scenery is just stunning. Quite otherworldly. It is also the cleanest place I have ever visited. The Icelandic are very proud of their country and take great pride in its appearance. They are very geared up for tourism, with good signage and parking.
By staying in apartments, rather than hotels, we were able to self-cater for a lot less than eating out costs.

The bad

I was quite surprised by the number of tourists. This is great for Iceland, as tourism brings money, but trying to find time away from the crowds is tricky. Thankfully, as we were spending a few days in each location, if somewhere was busy then we could return later when the tourist buses have moved on.

Iceland is also expensive, very expensive. A couple of burgers and a few beers in a bar came to around £90.

The ugly

The tourist’s buses on the Golden Circle sometimes use “super-taxi’s” – they look like a mini-bus on a monster truck chassis. The worst driving we saw in all of our time, there was from these. They speed everywhere and act as if they own the road. They do not like people doing their own thing, as it means they are not making money from them. In our ten days there, the only bad driving we saw from them.

Conclusion

Iceland is a photographers dream. Stunning vistas, good light, the chance of seeing the Northern Lights, it does have a lot going for it. It’s quite a big country, and our ten days there flew by. I’d love to go again, maybe in summer to experience the midnight sun, possibly heading North to see a different part of the island.
It’s getting busier al the time, so I would go sooner rather than later if you want to see the unspoiled natural beauty before it is ruined by hordes of unthinking tourists.

Costa Rica trip report – the good, the bad, and the ugly

As ever, I will be brutally honest, I paid for this out of my own pocket and I have certain expectations.

The good

Great scenery, good infrastructure, lush jungles, and an abundance of wildlife makes this a photographers dream destination.
We hired a small 4×4 and whilst the standard of driving was worse than the UK (in Costa Rica nobody gives an inch), it was much better than we expected. I was quite comfortable driving everywhere, the roads were generally in good condition (other than the occasional massive pot hole). Unfortunately, we ended up taking a wrong turn and went through the centre of San Jose – not recommended!

Alajuela

We decided to spend the first couple of nights nearish to the airport, to avoid driving too tired.
We had the hotel collect us, and had the hire car dropped off at the hotel – this worked well.
The Hotel Buena Vista had nice grounds, with lots of planting that attracted a range of bugs and insects, and was a fine place to relax for a couple of days and let the body clock adjust to Costa Rica time.
Hire car was from Vamos, I took the super insurance so absolutely everything was covered. Not needed thankfully, but for peace of mind it was worth it.

Arenal

The drive up to Arenal was nice, the traffic not too heavy, and our next hotel, Arenal Observatory Lodge and Spa was decent enough.
More importantly it was situated next to the Arenal volcano, which although is now pretty much dormant, was still emitting some gas.
The lodge has several miles of well-maintained trails around the property, and some resident coatis, which were on the list of ‘things to see’.
We did the evening frog walk, and whilst we had spectacular success seeing various species of tree frog, including the red-eyed tree frog (another target species) the 2 hour forced march in near 100% humidity was a bit much!

Monteverde

Staying at the Monteverde Lodge & Gardens we were spoiled by the on-site nature walks, on-site butterfly house, great food and nice surroundings.
Visiting the Monteverde Cloud Forest reserve was not quite as spectacular as hoped, mainly because it was quite busy, and all a bit too ‘manicured’. This is understandable, people visit because it’s accessible. We were fortunate enough to see a sloth, mainly because we overheard a guide pointing one out, although it was a long way off, and sleeping.
Nearby however was a much smaller reserve, Curi Cancha – well recommended. We had a good guide, and saw spider monkeys, the resplendent quetzal, green toucan, and a variety of other life.
Avoiding the crowds, we went back to Curi Cancha for a night walk, and it was fantastic. Frogs, tarantulas, wandering spiders, all were targets for the macro lens.

Tortuguero

On a map, Monteverde to Tortuguero isn’t that far, unfortunately the trip involves going down to San Jose then right across the country. It was a solid 6 hrs of driving, the last hour on unmade roads. It’s than an hours boat ride down river to the town of Tortuguero, followed by another boat transfer to Tortuguero Lodge.
Despite being on the coast, if the wind dropped the humidity was pretty high, but manageable.
A boat tour through the canals was well worth it – sloths, monkeys, caiman and kingfishers were all sighted. We were also fortunate enough to have great sightings of a couple of different sloths, which are on everybody’s must-see list.
The grounds also had plenty of strawberry poison dart frogs, tiny, but beautiful.
Having seen what we wanted to see, we left here a day early, preferring to stay near the airport for our last night, rather than risk the drive against the clock.

The bad

We found most of the staff at the Tortuguero Lodge pretty unfriendly. Receptionists and bar staff rarely smiled, and my cheery “buenas dias” was met with a mumbled reply. One notable exception was one of the waiters, Manuel. He was always friendly, and exceptionally helpful.

The ugly

British Airways – more specifically the state of the cabin and the whole experience with BA.
We cashed in a bunch of Avios (frequent flyer points) and decided to go business class. Pretty much none of the experience was ‘premium’, the lounge was awful as it was a shared lounge – they are having a new one built. The plane was filthy – wine stains up the wall, seat and floor covered in crumbs, the divider between the seats needed wiped as it had food on it still and every single plastic surface was grubby. It was the same both ways. Couple this with a fairly poor (for business class) seat, poor food (no choice of starter) and surly staff on the way home, it was definitely not what one expects of a ‘premium’ product.

Conclusion

Costa Rica is reasonable value, but if you are used to paying $1-2 for a beer in Asia, be prepared to pay double that. Same went for food. Granted, we were staying in mid-range places, but when lunch is costing $40 for 2, it’s definitely not a budget destination. I have no doubt you can eat and stay much cheaper, but given the camera kit I was travelling with we wanted a reasonable level of comfort and security.

That said, as a destination for a photographer, it is fantastic. We only went for 2 weeks, so restricted our travels to 3 main areas. I would gladly go back and visit Monteverde again, Tortuguero was OK, and Arenal is worth going back to if the volcano kicks off, unfortunately they think that may not be for over 100 years while the magma chamber refills. There are other parts of the country I would love to go and see, plus, I still need to see a properly active volcano.

It’s very easy to get there from the UK as there is a direct flight from Gatwick to San Jose (10.5 hrs), many people speak English (lots of American visitors) and with my reasonable Spanish we had zero communication problems. Everything generally felt safe.

All in all it was a great 2 weeks. I came back with some fantastic images and good memories.

Kgalagadi Transfrontier national park trip report – The good, the bad, and the ugly

This trip was part of my honeymoon, so photography was not the primary factor, although it was definitely high on the agenda thanks to a very understanding wife.

The Kgalagadi spans the border of South Africa and Botswana, forming part of the Kalahari desert. An arid park, I had read numerous reports telling of huge numbers of predators and raptors, plus an abundance of the smaller, rarer animals. There are no rhino, and no elephants, as it’s just too dry for them.

The good

In the Kgalagadi we had some great sightings, fornicating lions, lions asleep in the road, a cheetah with it’s kill, and 3 different leopard sightings.
There was a profusion of birds of prey, owls, eagles, falcons, a really nice range of different birds.
Using my UV torch at night helped me to spot several scorpions, and everything was rounded off with a cape cobra with it’s hood fully flared.
The lack of population means the night sky is almost totally unaffected by light pollution, so you get a fantastic milky way just about every night.
Being in the park just after the rains meant there was quite a lot of vegetation and greenery around, rather than the rolling red sand dunes the park is famous for.

However, both of us (the new wife and I) felt a little underwhelmed by it all. We had had more prolific sightings in other parks, and were hopeful here of finding the smaller stuff that everybody raved about, yet did not see 1 cape fox, nor a single hyena.

The bad

There were some disappointments on the trip, in general they were brought about by the almost total lack of accommodation availability in the park. Sure, we could have camped, but we aren’t into camping. It was almost impossible to get 2 nights in a row at any accommodation other than the main camp (Twee Rivieren).
So, we decided on staying at Kgalagadi Lodge, just 5km from the main gate.

We were not expecting luxury, but getting basics wrong is pretty hard to justify.

Having to order our main meal for the restaurant by 5pm, when we are likely to still be in the park. How does that work?

The on site shop that shuts at the same time as the park gate closes. So, we can’t use the restaurant as we haven’t ordered, yet we can’t buy anything to cook ourselves as the shop is shut?

A bar that shut at 8pm one evening, despite telling us they stay open until at least 9pm.

A shop that advertises game meat, yet only has 1 packet of springbok kebabs, and no steaks, just lamb.

A pool that is totally unusable as it was full of dust and grit. I didn’t care about the pool, but when are given the option, it’s a ‘nice to have’. Having a scabby dust filled hole in the ground just so you can advertise a pool – not good form.

Just lots of disappointing little bits, which do all add up.

Because of the lack of availability in the park, we had to visit as day visitors, and this severely limits your options for exploring the park. There are only 2 main roads within the park, and barely any link roads between the two, and a lack of little loops such as you get in Kruger, Etosha, Pilanesberg. So, unless what you wanted to see was on or near the main road, you were out of luck. It’s a big park, and it is only just possible to visit one of the other camps and get back in time for the gate closing – so you are limited to a tiny portion of the park.
I know they intentionally keep the amount of accommodation low, to keep the visitor numbers down, and this is reflected in the generally very courteous behaviour of the other people we saw in the park, lots of people stopping for a chat, pointing out sightings, and when there is a good sighting, everybody keeps the road clear, unlike Pilanesberg!
However, when you have to be ready to book the accommodation you want 1 year ahead of time when the reservation opens, it’s not conducive to attracting new people to the park.

The ugly

As with many other places, there is a Facebook group set up for reporting sightings in the park, but it is also a great platform for sharing experiences and asking questions about the Kgalagadi.
Unless that is you dare to report a negative experience. The venom, hostility, and outright abuse directed at me for daring to mention that it’s not the best park I have ever visited was unexpected. To be honest, being rebuked by a faceless keyboard warrior doesn’t bother me, it actually made me feel sorry for them, their blinkered view of their beloved park means they don’t see the real issue. Whilst they may be glad that ‘normal’ tourists are put off from going there, those ‘normal’ tourists will happily take their money and spend it elsewhere, then the park has less money, and the poor facilities they like to moan about will never be fixed.

I put up a reasoned, balanced post about why I probably wouldn’t be rushing back to Kgalagadi, preferring the other parks I have visited recently, and was told “GOOD RIDDANCE” by one particularly vocal person.
Good effort mate, people are already dubious about South Africa owing to high levels of violent crime, murder and rape, and you are telling tourists good riddance, smart move.

Eventually, the page moderator decided to delete the thread, without bothering to tell me. So, in their own little world everything is perfect again.

Conclusion

Whilst we had a few disappointments with the accommodation, we worked hard for some great sightings and generally had a very pleasant time within the park, and within South Africa as a whole – Kgalagadi was just a third of the trip.
We genuinely think that we are just a little safari’d out – when you get blasé about lions, you know you have been spoiled in the past.
I don’t let the bad bits put me off, but they may delay my return, as there is a whole world to visit. With that in mind, 2 weeks in Costa Rica are coming up soon!

Part 3 – The ugly

At the moment (end of 2015) Sri Lanka is in the grip of a construction boom. Everywhere you look there are new guest houses and hotels being thrown up. I do mean thrown up, the construction looks downright unsafe and working practices are lethal – sledgehammer vs flip-flop is going to end badly.

What is the reason for this sudden rush of new buildings? Tourism – and every man and his dog jumping on the band wagon. Someone builds a guest house, and rents out rooms. Next door neighbour sees this, so decides to the same. Then his neighbour sees they are both making money and decides to do rooms as well. Eventually the whole street is doing the same thing, but nobody is making any money as there are not enough tourists to go around, so buildings sit half constructed, the area starts to look a bit worse for wear, and the tourists stop coming altogether.

On speaking with many Sri Lankans, and a few ex-pats, this seems to be a common theme. The ideas are good, but the execution is poor, and the maintenance and upkeep is non-existent.

Take for instance the Hotel Glendower in Nuwara Eliya. This small hotel was surrounded on 3 sides by different construction sites, 2 of which involved major works with piling rigs. Given the small handful of tourists we saw in Nuwara Eliya, I struggle to see what demand they are trying to fill.

Of course, this rampant construction needs plenty of materials moving, which means there are hundreds of massive dumper trucks crawling along on the steep, twisty mountain roads, belching out vast quantities of fumes. Couple this with the multitude of buses also spewing fumes out, and the fresh hill country air is anything but! We could not drive with the windows down as the pollution was incessant.

We found some of the beautiful Sri Lanka we had imagined, it was on the road from Nuwara Eliya back to Colombo, but as ever there was nowhere to stop and enjoy the view, owing to having the buses try to bully you out of the way, and any available space filled with construction traffic.

I so wanted to enjoy Sri Lanka, but after 10 days I had had enough of the pollution, traffic, construction and general state of the place. It’s a shame, but it seems the rush to make money is having a detrimental effect on what was previously a stunning place to visit.

Part 2 – The bad

Where to start? There were many things that just were not to my liking in Sri Lanka, it is far from the quaint ex-colonial paradise that it is made out to be. It’s horrifically busy, disorganised, and it feels that you are just a walking cheque book to the locals.

The roads

We decided to self drive as we have driven in many different countries, and you get more of a feel for a place than when you just get bussed from one tourist trap to the next.

It is a hair raising experience driving yourself around Sri Lanka, road signs are ignored and the general rule of the road is ‘biggest vehicle wins’. Death defying double overtakes on blind mountain bends are a common occurrence, and if you don’t overtake the vehicle in front of you, whoever behind is instantly leaning on their horn.

Pedestrians take their lives in their hands to get across, although there have been some half hearted measures to provide crossing points. As with many thing we experienced in Sri Lanka, the idea is good but the execution is poor.

There are painted pedestrian crossings everywhere in the towns, however they are universally ignored by all, both motorists and the pedestrians. The police will wait on these crossings to stop motorists, but they ignore the fact that even when people are on the crossing vehicles will sound their horn to make them get out of the way, lest they have to slow down a fraction. A good idea, but the lack of enforcement makes it worse than useless.

Misrepresentation

Like many independent travellers, the Lonely Planet guide books are my first port of call when planning a trip, and used to help determine where to go, where to stay etc.

Our edition was published in January 2015, so not old, but I am dubious as to whether it has been actually updated in years as some of their descriptions are a little misleading, to say the least.

Let us take their description of the town of Ella, in the hill country;

“Welcome to everyone’s favourite hill-country village and the place to ease off the travel accelerator with a few leisurely days resting in your choice of some of the country’s best guesthouses.”

The reality is that Ella is a single, badly maintained road through a proliferation of poorly constructed and often unfinished buildings. Yes, some of the views are nice, but it’s hard to appreciate them when breathing is difficult owing to the fumes pumped out by the constant procession of construction traffic and buses.

A further example, the town of Nuwara Eliya;

“Nuwara Eliya is often referred to by the Sri Lankan tourist industry as ‘Little England’. While most British visitors struggle to recognise modern England in Nuwara Eliya, the toy-town ambience does have a rose-tinted English country village feel to it, though it comes with a disorienting surrealist edge….. The dusty and bustling centre of town is a thoroughly Sri Lankan tangle, but scratch the surface a little to reveal colonial bungalows, well-tended hedgerows and pretty rose gardens.”

The entire town is dusty, busy, and filled with people who just stare at foreign tourists. One would have thought that by now western faces were not such a rarity, but having walked through town and felt like an alien I cannot help but feel unwanted. Where are the friendly Sri Lankans everybody raves about?

The hotels we visited in Nuwara Eliya were some of the worst in our short time in Sri Lanka. We visited several and viewed the rooms as we wanted to find somewhere clean and comfortable.

Teabush hotel – nice looking, reasonably hot water, but no alcohol because “It’s the law”. Really? I didn’t realise Sri Lanka had become abstinent, given their love of Lion lager.

Hotel Glendower – needing somewhere for lunch, and a quick peruse of the internet to find some accommodation, we popped in here.
Me: “May I have the WIFI code please”
Staff: “Of course, here you go”
Me: “Excuse me, this doesn’t seem to work”
Staff: “No, not working today”
So why even bother giving me the code?

The ultimate turnoff with the Glendower was the appearance of shark-fin soup on the menu. I refuse to eat in a place that encourages the destruction of an apex predator just to meet the whims of a certain subset of diners.

Ceybank rest – we finally elected to stay here as we were tired, and hungry, and fed up of looking elsewhere. Big mistake.
The place is filthy and mouldy owing to being permanently damp. The sheets were stained, the shower was caked in grime. The shower curtain was mouldy and help up with a piece of string. The curtain in the bathroom was going black with mould. Upon waking in the morning the condensation was running down the inside of the windows.
We went into the bar and I was concerned we would end up with Legionella it was so damp in there.
The food was just as bad, and unfortunately followed the pattern of your typical lazy small hotel – a buffet, half of which was cold.

None of the above are budget backpacker type places, they are described a mid-range. Is it too much to expect clean sheets, hot water and decent food?

Food

The food was hit and miss. It was always tasty, but requests for ‘spicy please’ always went unanswered. Even when staying for a few nights, they would not up the heat level despite repeated requests.
Speaking of heat, oftentimes meals would come out barely warm, on one occasion (in a not so cheap hotel) it was stone cold.
Where were the street food vendors?
Where were the roti shops?
I adore curry and love street food, yet found very little other than restaurants who shared the same menus with all of their neighbours.

Am I just a walking ATM?

It seems that everybody in Sri Lanka is doing their best to extract as much money as possible from tourists. It’s understandable in a way, as to a typical Sri Lankan we must seem like millionaires given we fly half way around the world just to go on holiday.
It’s a little unpalatable however when I am charged 75 times (yes, seventy five times) what a local is charged to go into a national park.
Being made to feel tight by only tipping someone what is, in effect, half a day’s wages just for carrying a bag 100m, only to have them asking for more.
Having someone at a high end hotel grab my bags, carry them to reception, then demand money.

It all gets a little tiring after a bit, and just compounded our general bad feeling about the place.

Other than Nuwara Eliya, and especially the decrepit state of the Ceybank Rest hotel, there was not really any major problems or disasters that made us cut short the trip, instead it was just a multitude of smaller aggravations and annoyances.
We have travelled extensively and never have we considered cutting short a trip, even when caught in a week of solid rain in Vietnam.

Our plan after Nuwara Eliya was to head into the cultural triangle, and then further North into Jaffna. Knowing that the cultural triangle would be another tourist trap, complete with excessive entry fees to the sites did not fill us with hope. Neither did the thought of heading to a region that is basically new, having been extensively rebuilt following civil war.

Because of this, we just did not feel like continuing. There was no point in us trying to force ourselves to enjoy a trip that had so far provided more downsides than good bits, so flights were rearranged and we flew home after just 11 days of a planned 28 day trip.

Our lasting memory of Sri Lanka will be one of constant construction sites, and I’ll cover that in more detail in Part 3.

A few images from a week in Iceland. We were hit with a massive snowfall the first night (biggest in 80 years) , following which we spent a week on the Southern coast, having 3 nights of fantastic Northern Lights activity. ...